CHRONOLOGY - Rice for Africa
Transcript of CHRONOLOGY - Rice for Africa
CHRONOLOGY• LAUNCHING OF THE NRDS
– Launched by the Executive Governor and Chief Servant of Niger State , Dr. Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, OON
– Date: Monday 29th March, 2010
– Venue: U. K. Bello Arts Theatre Minna, Niger State
– Well attended by international and domestic stakeholders
• Participating Development Partners– JICA Nigeria
– USAID
– FAO
– Africa Rice Centre
– World Bank
– DFID
• MID-YEAR STAKE-HOLDERS MEETING
– June 3, 2010 (tentative)
• Participating Development Partners– JICA Nigeria
– USAID
– FAO
– Africa Rice Centre
– World Bank
– KOICA
– AfDB
– DFID
– IITA
– IFPRI, IFAD, NEPAD Nigeria
2UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
MODALITY OF IMPLEMENTATION National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) of Federal Ministry of Agriculture & Rural Development(FMARD), Japanese Int’l Cooperation Agency (JICA), Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN),USAID, DFID, AfDB, Federal Ministry of Commerce & Industries, Federal Ministry of Finance,National Planning Commission, Central Bank of Nigeria, Bank of Industries, Nigerian AgriculturalCooperative & Rural Development Bank, Rice Processors Association of Nigeria (RPAN), NigerianCustoms Services, Presidential Committee on Trade Malpractices
State Agricultural Development Projects (ADP), National Bureau of Statistics,Central Bank of Nigeria
NFRA (FMARD), State Agricultural Development Projects (ADP) of the 36States of the Federation and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT)
JICA, World Bank, Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations(FAO), USAID, DFID, Africa Rice Centre, World Food Programme, UNIDO, IFAD
RIFAN, Rice Millers Association of Nigeria (RMAN), Rice Dealers Association,Rice Importers and Distributors of Nigeria, Women-in-Agriculture of Nigeria
RIFAN, Independent Rice Farmers (Small Holders), Independent CommercialFarmers
Rice Processors of Nigeria, Rice Investors under the N10 billion Special RiceIntervention Fund of the Federal Government
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NRDS TFASM
MSM
ACR
MCB
HL Indicators
Project Updates
Project Updates
Project Updates
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Stats Dept.
Government
Donors
NGOs
Farmers
Commercial Sector
UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
CONSTRAINTS FOR IMPLEMENTATION OF NRDS
1. Funding to meet:a. Infrastructural development e.g. Power, Irrigation Facilities, Feeder/Rural Roads which
constitute a problem for year round supply of paddy for the Processing Mills.
b. Mechanization of farming operations.
c. Acquisition of harvesting and rice processing equipment and infrastructure for deliveryof high quality processed rice at competitive prices.
2. Changes in Government policies in the areas of concessions and tariffs.
3. Poor agricultural credit system.
4. Dearth of critical human resource capacity along the value chain to drivethe NRDS.
5. Poor input supply linkages
6. Poor market infrastructure
4UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
OVERVIEW OF THE RICE SUB-SECTOR COVERAGEOverall Analysis of Rice Projects Code Title PartnersNG-1 Developing Agri-inputs Market in Nigeria (DAIMINA) USAID
NG-2 Dissemination of new rice varieties in Nigeria using participatory varietal Rockefeller / Gatsby
selection (PVS) approach
NG-3 National Special Programme for Food Security (NSPFS) AfDB / FAO / Government of Nigeria (GoN)
NG-4 Rice Production, Post-harvest Processing and Marketing Adviser JICA
NG-5 Second National Fadama Development Project (Fadama II) World Bank
NG-6 Presidential Initiative on Increased Rice Production, Processing and Export GoN
NG-7 Maximizing Agricultural Revenue and Key Enterprises in Targeted Sites (MARKETS) USAID
NG-8 Promoting Pro-Poor Opportunities through Commodity and Service Markets (PrOpCom) DFID
NG-9 Multinational NERICA Rice Dissemination Project AfDB
NG-10 Rice Seed Production AfDB / AGRA
NG-11 National Programme for Food Security (NPFS) BADEA / IDB / GoN
NG-12 Rehabilitation of Small-scale Irrigation Schemes FAO / GoN / China
NG-13 Construction of Rice Processing Complex in Nigeria KOICA
NG-14 Rice Processing Intervention Fund GoN/Private Sector (PPP)
NG-15 Breeding for High-yielding Stable Drought Tolerant Rice and Provision of Quality Seeds of Rice AGRA
for Poor Resource Farmers in Nigeria
NG-16 Targeting Drought-avoidance Root Traits to Enhance Rice Productivity under CGIAR
Water-limited Environments
NG-17 Third National Fadama Development Project (Fadama III) World Bank
NG-18 Commercial Agricultural Development Project (CADP) World Bank
NG-19 The Study on the Development of the Efficient use and Recycling of Water Resources JIRCAS
NG-20 Improvement of Drought and Submergence Tolerance of Rice in Africa, including NERICA JIRCAS
5UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
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Current Situation on
Rice
Policy / institutional Infrastructure Human resource
capacity
Provision / support Information /
knowledge
Unclassified
Seed NG11-2; NG15-5,6 NG15-7 NG3-2; NG6-1; NG6-
5; NG9-2; NG10;
NG17-3; NG14-2
NG15-1,2,3; NG16-
1,2,3,4; NG20
Fertilizer NG11-2 NG3-2; NG6-1; NG9-
2; NG17-3; NG14-2
Irrigation / water
management
NG11-2 NG6-2*; NG11-1;
NG12-1
NG12-2
On-farm technology
dissemination
NG3-1 NG8-4; NG8-6;
NG8-7; NG9-2;
NG18-1
NG6-1; NG17-4 NG2; NG8-6; NG8-7;
NG9-1, NG9-5,6;
NG15-3,4; NG18-1
Mechanization NG8-5; NG12-2 NG8-5
Quality improvement NG6-3, NG7-2; NG7-
4;
NG13-1; NG14-1 NG6-3; NG7-2;
NG7-4; NG12-2;
NG13-2; NG14-2
NG7-2; NG8-3;
NG13-2
Access to market NG7-1; NG7-3; NG7-
4; NG13-3;
NG18-2 NG1-3; NG7-1;
NG7-3; NG7-4;
NG11-3; NG18-1
NG1-3 NG7-3; NG7-4; NG8-
3; NG13-3; NG18-1
Access to credit NG11-3 NG14-2
Overall policy tools NG1-1; NG1-3;
NG7-4; NG8-1;
NG8-2; NG11-2;
NG5-2 NG1-2; NG8-2;
NG9-3; NG11-3;
NG12-2; NG17-1;
NG5-1, NG5-3
NG5-3; NG14-2 NG4; NG8-6; NG19-
1,2,3,4
Unclassified NG17-2, NG18-2 NG3-3; NG5-1 NG17-5 NG4
Out NG6-4; NG9-4; NG11-4; NG18-3
Note :
LEGEND:
CROP PROTECTION: NG6-1; *Rehabilitation and improvement, no new infrastructure constructed
NG1, NG2, NG3, NG4, NG5, NG6, NG7, NG8, NG9, NG10, NG11, NG12, NG13, NG14, NG15, NG16, NG17, NG18, NG19, NG20
UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
CURRENT SITUATION ON RICE-RELATED INTERVENTIONS
ANALYSIS
SUB-SECTOR THAT HAVE HEAVY INTERVENTION
1. Post- Harvest Processing
SUB-SECTOR WITH POOR INTERVENTION
1. Rice Extension Services
2. Capacity Building
3. Infrastructure
4. Irrigation
5. Agricultural Credit
6. Seed Infrastructure
7. Agro-Chemicals
7UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
AREAS REQUIRING INTERVENTIONAgro- Processing ( Priority 1 of the NRDS)
Short, Medium,
& Long Term - Provision of equipment/machinery and training.
Rice Extension Services
Short Term - Training for agricultural extension workers ; and to formalize and strengthen the
linkage between the Rice Farmers’ Association of Nigeria (RIFAN) and the Federal andState agricultural establishments (e.g. ADPs). RIFAN will be used as an effectivechannel for disseminating technology to rural farmers.
Medium Term - To reduce extension agent- farmer ratio from the current 1:10,000 to 1:1,000.
Long Term - To develop private sector extension service delivery system and reduce the extensionagent- farmer ratio from the current 1:1000 to 1:350.
Mechanization ( Priority 2 of the NRDS)
Short, Medium,
& Long Term - To provide appropriate machines and equipment for the various stages of rice valuechain to reduce drudgery, improve efficiency and quality of the end product.
Capacity building
Short, Medium,
& Long Term - To provide appropriate training that would ensure creation of critical mass of humanresource to drive the rice value chain.
8UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
AREAS REQUIRING INTERVENTIONIrrigation
Short Term - To provide small and medium scale irrigation equipment to the farmers, rehabilitateexisting irrigation schemes and develop/expand potential irrigable land
Medium Term - To establish hydro-met stations at project sites for adequate data collection for effectiveplanning and proper management purposes.
To conduct proper environmental impact assessment (EIA) for sustainable development.Long Term - Continue land development until all potential irrigable land has been put under cultivation
Agricultural CreditShort, Medium& Long Term - To increase credit accessibility by increasing the sources, strengthening the capacity of the
agric lending institutions and improving the lending terms to obtain a single digit interestrate.
Seed Infrastructure ( Priority 3 of the NRDS)Short Term - Adequate and timely funding for institutions in the seed sector targeted at rice seed
development.Medium Term - Implementation of existing seed laws and to make the existing mechanism for seed control
and certification more functional and efficient, with active involvement of private investors.Long Term - Build capacity for seed production (from breeder to certified seed or seed of acceptable
quality).Agro-Chemicals
Short Term - Capacity building in proper handling and application for suppliers and farmers ; Availabilityand accessibility of the appropriate chemicals
Medium Term - Enacting legislation and laws for proper control of the sectorLong Term - Build capacity for agro-chemical production in the country
Infrastructure (This is required to make all the interventions in the other areas effective)Short, Medium, & Long Term - To improve infrastructure required across the rice value chain particularly market
infrastructure, power, feeder roads and irrigation infrastructure.
9UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
Rain fed lowland
Rain fed lowland
Rain fed lowland
Rain fed lowland
Production
Potential untapped
Consumption
Research
Project sites
Seed distributionfacilities
Priority areas
Note: Production, Potential Untapped and Priority areas are all located within the same region, so line colour is used to indicate these areas.
10UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
LOCATION MAP
NRDS LINKAGE WITH OTHER DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
1. Collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Finance on the fixing of benchmark price ofimported rice as well as on harmonisation of tariffs to bridge the gap between the polishedand brown rice imported into the country which has been the subject of abuse by riceimporters.
2. National Programme for Food Security which has the vision of ensuring sustainable access,availability and affordability of quality food to all Nigerians and for Nigeria to be a significantnet provider of food to the global community.
identified rice as one of the food security and import substitution crops.
Planned production increase by 100%.
It is also adopting the value chain approach for its planned improvement.
Increase irrigation area to rice by 60,000 hectares.
3. Sanitary and phyto-sanitary control strategies of the Nigerian Agricultural QuarantineServices.
4. National Seed Council strategies on the provision of improved seeds (Multinational NERICARice Dissemination Project, National Foundation Seed Programme, Community Seed GrowersProject).
11UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
CURRENT SITUATION OF THE NRDS
Necessary preparations are being made to start the implementation of the strategies contained inthe document which include:
1. Circulation of the document to the national and international stakeholders that would ensure buy-in at alllevels and secure funding for the NRDS implementation.
To this end, the following existing Government policies will aid in sustaining the NRDSimplementation and also ensure sustainable investment in the future:
1. Provision of 50% and 25% subsidies for seed and other critical inputs for rice production.
2. Promotion of an enhanced investment climate along the rice value chain.
3. Promotion of human capacity building by relevant stakeholders.
4. Provision of the N10 billion Rice Processing Intervention Fund for the establishment of 17 large-scaleintegrated mills and upgrading of existing ones.
5. Provision for zero tariff on importation of rice processing equipment.
6. Operation of the Guaranteed Minimum Price for paddy to encourage continuous domestic paddyproduction by Nigerian rice famers.
7. Warehousing Receipt Bill, when passed, will expand and improve the financing opportunities available tothe various actors in the agricultural sector and by extension to the rice value chain players.
12UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
CURRENT SITUATION OF THE NRDS......cont
Proposals that would address some of the strategies outlined in the NRDS have already been prepared and are at various stages of consideration by the Japanese Government and World Bank.
1. Title: Nigerian Rice Value Chain
• Development Partner: Japanese Government through the Word Bank
• Type: Application for grant under the Japan Social Trust Fund
• Value: US$3 million
• Status: Advance stage of consideration
2. Title: Human Development Programme (in the rice sector)
• Development Partner: Japanese Government through the Word Bank
• Type: Application for grant under the Japan Social Trust Fund
• Value: US$15 million
• Status: About to be submitted for consideration
3. Title: Kennedy Round 2 (KR-2) Programme
• Development Partner: Japanese Government through JICA
• Type: Grant
• Value:
• Status: Advance stage of consideration
13UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
CURRENT SITUATION OF THE NRDS......cont
In addition, some of the projects currently going on as part of the implementation of the NRDS include establishment of new and reactivation of existing mills under Public Private Partnership (PPP) arranment.
Establishment of 17 Large-Scale Integrated Rice mills.
• In 12 States within the major production area of the country
• Very few of the mills are at various stages of completion with the final completion date of August, 2010
• Some of the investors have acquired massive land for rice cultivation and are developing their out-grower schemes in line with theNRDS
Niger State:Reactivation of Federal Government-owned Badeggi Rice Mill (30,000 tonnes/annum capacity)
• The mill is being managed by Deanshager Projects Limited, a private Company under a PPP arrangement
• The company has established an out-grower scheme with 3,000 registered rice farmers
• Established a micro finance arrangement for the farmers with one of the top banks in Nigeria, which has opened a branch at the mill.
Anambra State: Reactivation of Federal Government – owned Omor Rice mill (15,000 tonnes/annum processing capacity)
• The mill will be managed by a private rice processing company, Olam Nigeria Ltd, while the ownership structure will include the StateGovernment and the rice farmers in the area to ensure sustainability of its operations.
• The State government will be providing the necessary infrastructure (road, water and electricity ) to ensure the success of the mill
• The Lower Anambra irrigation project, which is located in the area, will be resuscitated to further enhance the project’s success andsustainability in line with the NRDS
Ogun State:
• Has incorporated rice development as part of its economic and development strategy in line with the NRDS.
• Identified rice production for deliberate promotion as a poverty alleviation measure.
• Installed one large scale mill (Ofada/Veetee Rice Mill) with capacity of 30,000 tonnes/annum (with potential for expansion to 200,000tonnes annum) that is being operated under PPP arrangement with veetee Nig. Ltd at Itori/Ewekro area of the state.
• The product from this mill is to be marketed under the Ofada brand which has tremendous traditional and social popularity withconsumers in the tickly populated area of Lagos the Southwest zone.
14UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
FUTURE STEPS
1. NRDS TF Meeting to review the action plan for theimplementation of the NRDS.
2. Follow- up and review of the work plan for the completion of the17 large scale Integrated Rice mills currently being establishedunder the N10 billion Special Rice Intervention Fund.
3. Ensure the proper development of the out- grower schemesunder the N10 billion Special Rice Intervention Fund.
4. Start the implementation of the 3 projects currently underconsideration by the Japanese government upon approval.
5. Continue to shop for intervention for the other poorly supportedareas of the rice value chain.
15UPDATE ON NRDSNIGERIA
THANK YOU FOR LISTENING
NIGERIA UPDATE ON NRDS 16